CH) faaaiaaaaaaaaasasiafc1tifcS ' ' The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALLES OREGON TUESDAY MAY 3, 1892 Wanted. A girl to do general house work, apply to Mre. Hugh Fraser.v KOK BALE. At a bargain. A lot of store shelving. Apply at this office. - . " 4-27dtf First-class job work can be had at the Chronicle job office on short notice and at reasonable prices. Produce and Merchandise Trices. Whbat We quote "55 to GO cents per bushel. Corn in sacks' $1.40$1.50 per 100 lbs.- Oats The oat market is in good sap ply with limited demand; We quote 1.20 cents to $1.25 per cental. - Bablkt The barley supply is limited good with a limited . inquiry.'1 ' Brewing $1.00 per cental. Feed barley at 80 to 90 cents per cental. - -' ' ' - Flour Local brands wholesale $4.15 a$4.50 per barrel. ' '". Millbtctps Wequote bran at -'$20.00 per ton. Retail $1.00 per 100Bs. Shorts , and- middlings, $22.50$25.00 per ton. Chop corn at $28.00- to $30.00 per ton.' Rolled barlay at $28.00 to $30.00 per ton. " ' Hat Timothy hay "is in good supply at quotations $14.00 to $15.00. Wheat hay is quoted at 12.50$13.00 per ton, and scarce, baled. Wild hay is qoo ' ted at $12.0013.00 per . ton. Alfalfa $12.00 baled. Oat hay $13.00. Potatoes Abundant v ' -at' 50 to 60 cents a sack and demand limited. 1 B otter We quote Al .40 (as. 65 cents per roll, and very plentiful.- - ' " Fogs Are not coming in freely and the market strong, we quote 13 to 15 cents. ' Poultry Old fowls are in better sup ply at $4.00 to $4.50 per dozen. . Apples 1.7o$2.00 box and scarce. Vegetables Cabbage, turnips, carrots and onions, cent per pound. Hides Prime dry hides are quoted at .06 per pound.- Culla .0405. Green ;02 .03. Salt .03.04. Sheep pelts 1.00 to $1.75; butchered, 75 to cents; bear skins $6 to $8; coyote .60; mink 50 cents each; martin $1.00; beaver, $1.75 (313.00 per lb. ; otter,' $2.005.00 each for Al ; coon, .30 each ; badger, .25 each ; fisher, $2.50 to $4.00 each; Red, Fox, $10.00;,- Dilod gray, $25.00; Black Fox, $25.00; Polecat; $.25; Wild cat, $.50 ; Hedghog, $1.00 to $3.00. Bkkp Beef on foot clean and prime 2)c. for ordinary and 3c. for prime. - ' Mutton Choice .' weathers' 44g cents, and scarce per lb in carcas. ... Hogs 5c Dressed, and quite scarce. Veal 6 to 7 cents per It. Country bacon in round lotrlOc. -; Lard 51b. n cans .2Kc, ' lOtt. ;''' 40tt. 8a'cc. ' - ' . Lumber The supply is fairly, good. We quote No. 1 flooring and rustic $26.00. No 2 do. $21.00.- No. 3 do $16.50, Rough lumber $9. to $12. No. 1 cedar shingles $2,50$2.60. Lath $2.85. Lime $1.65$1.75 per bM.- Cement $4.50 per bbl. - STAPLE GROCERIES. Coffee Coeta Rica is quoted at 23 cents bv the sack : Sugars Chinese in' 100 Br-mats, Dry Granulated i Extra C, 5H cents C, 54 cents. American sugars Dry Granulated in barrels or sacks, 6 cents ; Extra C, in An K1 ' wn 4 . f1 CIS a. Stiirarfl - in 30 lb boxes are nnAtwl Golden C. $1.80; Extra C,; $2.10 r Dry Granulated $2.25. 'VJ Syrcp $2.25 to $2.75 can, kegs 1.90 mi .a.w egt ... - Rice Japan rice, 6J6a Scents ; Is land rice, 7 cents. Beaks Small white, 4 5 cents; Pink,44$ cents by the lOODbs." - - Stock Salt Is quoted at $17.50 per ton. Liverpool,' 501b sack, 70 cents 100 Ibsack. 1.25 200k sack, $2.25.- . JERSEY BULL--St Lambert The thoroughbred Jersey bull St. Lam bert, will stand for the season at. the Co lumbia Feed yard. . For service apply to David George.! . , - v;, 3.2oawlm i Kwa and Lambs for Sale. - I have 1,400 ewes and lambs for sale cheap. Call upon or address B. S. Kel say, Kent,' Sherman county,' Oregon. ' 4-23-lmd&w A - Word to' tlie Wise. . " The best business opening and chance to make money in the state, is lying Idle at Dufur, Or. A store 32x60 .well fur nished in a growing, and prosperous, farming community. For sale or rent cheap. Let us hear from you Address the 8. B. Med. Mfg. Co., or A. J. Brie ham, Dufur, Or. , - NOTICE. ', .Parties holding claims 'against W. S. Cram are notified topresent them to him at once, at the Columbia Candy Factory, and all those indebted are requested to settle at the same place, - as I have sold out my business and want to close np my accounts. Respectfully. -. 4-6dw4w -- - ;. W. 8. Cram. - NOTICE. All Dalles City warrants registered prior to September 1, 1890, will be paidif presented at my office. Interest ceases from and after -this date. -- . - Dated February 8th, 1 892.: : O. Kinersly, - tf. Treas. Dalles City. , DimoIbUoh Notice. - Notice is hereby given, that the co- R?$ner8biE heretofore existing between William Floyd, S. ABymaantf Stacy hhown. under the firm name of Byrne, Floyd & Co., in Dalles City, Or., has this day been dissolved by mutual consent. The-business xwill be -Tpohtraued at the old stand, by "William Floyd and Stacy Shown; whowill pay all bills and collect all debts.' . . . 6. A. Byrne, ' ' !. : V WiLL'iJtsr Floyd, : Dated: Apjri) 2ft.l$92tf8Tnr ?8hqwx. .j The" copartnership hetof ore existing between b. F. French and J. N. Lauer, doing bnsiBem in The Dallea'-nnder tbo firm name of, French & Lauer, ha, been dissolved1 by1 -mutual consent. " Thebusi new will eonduefctt at thai oid.:UB.d First street, by J. N Lauer who has purchased the same, and will collect and Py outstanding accounts. r ; ? f-14-dim ."t" IUICB -A LICCft. ' A HOME IN VENICE. AN ENGLISHMAN'S i IDEAL r" ABODE IN THE CITY OF CANALS." A Venetian Palace, Its Treasure or Art and Personal Interest A Few of. the Many Oruanteuts. Pictures. Hooks and Bits or Kuro Drlc--ric. -. , f -When sorno five and twenty years ngo Sir Henry Layord resolved to- makr. for himself, and for-the treasures-of art which he had - gathered from the four winds of heaven, a home in-Venice, he found, fortunately enough, that1 the Ca' (or Casa) Capello was just at the very -moment at his disposal. : It had been the abode for several: years of an English man who had just died,, and who had left Mr. Malcolm: . then- well known among the English residents and now their doyen, his executor. A friendship bad Jong existed between - Mr." Malcolm and Sir Henry Layard, born of similar ity of taste ..which Jas .ripened ..with many years pf -neighborhood and. inter course. . - "'--"- "' .' .--- -- '. ' It was thus that the Ca' Capello- came into the hands of Sir uenry Layard, and from thatday!t has been" hia home. Hither in the intervals of his ministerial duties, his missions and His visits to Us English kinsfolk, he' has returned with ever growing zest and affection. Here he has - surrounded himself with a fine library,-: a noble collection - of pictures and bronzes, marbles and mosaics, tap estries, . ancient . furniture and bric-a- brac,- relics of. the 'past, the spoils of a long. and varied career.. Here, too, in tne year 1869; he brought ; his wife, a daughter of the late Sir John Quest. . It is barely possible- to reach the Ca Capello on foot. " You may cross the Rialto and bear toward the left through and across- a series of tortuous and intri cate calli, but the two handsome . gon dolas, reposing on the , broad bosom of the canal at the door of Ca' Capello, which has every right, to be called .the frent,- suggest to the, callers- the only rational - method of entrance. It has been said that the house ' is not one of the largest; its aspect, however, is un doubtedly one of the most attractive'in the most beautiful highway in the world. , . . : .-. : ... THE HOUSE. - - The two sides of .the house,- one in .the Rio di San'. Polo, the principal, with -the porch on the Grand canal, give scope for a display of color which elsewhere might suggest garishness, bat which in Venice, p&r excellence-the - city of many -colors, is natural and pleasing. . As your gon dola reaches the broad flight of steps be hiha the tall green pali, you cannot fail to notice "that every window ill bears its burden of flowers -after our .English, fashion, and that the portico is a veritable floral - bover-, -with-1 a 'conservatory over it, jn which, beside ihe greenery an im men& Venetian ' glass - chandelier is a most' striking object. It is admass of vine with depending black grapes, great creeping convolvuluses, canariensis and white jessamin,- all struggling for life apparently, with no inconsiderable de gree of success, on the? trellis .work which supports them.:? J '- .'t-' .-- -As' Is conrmon W' Italian private resi dences, what we ordinarily describe at home as the ground floor . is given up to the servants and the domestic offices of the establishments i A abroad staircase on the left. of- the. entrance, on either side of which, fixed in the wall, is a frag ment of sculpture from Nineveh, leads 4nto a .hall of noble proportions which divides the house itself into two une qual parts,.. Here some of .the larger pieces of furniture, such as the cabi nets, are"; to be found; and here; too, a pair of admirable-three-quarter length portraits of Sir. Henry and Lady Lay ard, painted in Madrid byPalmaroli, head of. the Spanish 'academy at Rome, face each! other. Another portrait of Sir Henry Layard . challenges an . even closer inspection that, namely, by Lud wig Passini, which was shown in the ex hibition of - the Royal- academy. ' Large reception rooms give out on either side of. the hall, and, like it, all are "floored with terrazza,'a material which to its great beauty adds the advantage of be ing absolutely .uninflammable.-;;:-: .- ---v i " TASTEFUI. FDRNISHISas. ; The..dining room : and the v. drawing rooms -ara JUled, but not crowded, with beautiful, works of art, including mas terpieces of such painters as Gentile Bellini, Bonafazio, Sebastian del Piombo and many other famous Italian masters. Nor are -the exquisite Mnddelightful productions of the furnaces and work rooms of Murano forgotten. Of the modern Venetian glassblowing proc esses,. Sir Henry is. most indisputably the founder; and 'some of. the most per fect specimens of this beautiful art are, as it is fitting, to be seen in his house, as well as some beautiful inlay work, and the admirable Woodwork by BiraghL who executed the famous double stair case in -walnut wood -for Lord Wim borne, at Canford, under Sir -Henry's directions.' ' Sir Henry's own sanctum is on the upper floor' of the Casa. Here are records and memorials of a more per sonal: kind . than - wereVnoticed , in the lowertt reception room, - and - among them the Englishman does not fail to notice the framed certificate on illumi nated vellum, headed "Challis, Mayor," which sete- forth the bestowal of the honorary t freedom of -the city of Lon don -jiponAuSten Henry Layard. Here, too, are some noble bronze figures, portfolios, huge volumes bound in vel lum and gold, and a hostuf book nearly all, it may be remarked,-r quite modern literature together with the latest pwiodicals It- ia-harajoteristiir of Sir Henry. Layard'a. wide andieom--J prensave inteUecti.thati Jdiitied as he, is in the popular imagination with the history of the remotest past of Which we, have ;any knowledge, there is no living man more completely what 1 me eiang or ie-day calls "up to date." London World. - ; , the Caotbageniaag were -thb Mrst-tdi introduce "a" "stamped leather' fchrrency.' Leather coins with a silver, nail driven through the center were issued in France by King John the Good in 1303. PBOVIBBIONAL CARDS F M. 8ALYER. Civil Ehgikmeriko. Snn. , tng, snd Archltlcture. ,The Dalles, Or. DB. KSHELMAN (Homoeopathic; Physician and Sl'bokon. Calls answered promptlv, day or night, city or country. , Office No. 36 arid 37 Chapman block. . - - . , wtf DE J. SUTHERLAND Fkixo-w of TEikttt Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and Surgdfcn. Office; rooms 3 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury'g Sec nd street. Office hoars; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 nd 7 to S p. in. - - ' ... DK. O, I. DOANE PHYSICIAN AND 8UB : eeoN. - Office; rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. 'Residence No. 28, Fourth street, one tlock. south of Conrt Houbc: Office hours 9 to 12 A. M.a 3 to 5 and 7 to S P.JiL. , : DS1DDA1X Dkntist. Gas given for the painless extraction of teeth.- Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plat Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. . . , B.B.DVFUB. CEO. ATKINS. FRANK MENXFCB. DUFUR, W ATKINS & MENEFEE Attob - KBvs-Ai-tAW Room - No; 43, -over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON ATTOBKBT-AT-LAW Rooms ,54 and 68, New Vogt Block, Second Street. The Dalies, Oregon.. - ... . . A. 8. BENNETT, ATTORNE V-AT-LAW. Of- flee in Schanno's building, np Btalrs. The &ailes, Oregon, j --... - .- - r- BTATS. B. S. HUNTINGTON. ' , S, WitSON MAYS, HUNTINGTON & WILSON Attob , nvs-at-iaw. Office, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. SOCIK-TIKS. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF U Meets In K. f A- of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes days of each month at 7:30 p. m. - w A8CO IX)DGE, NO. 15, A- F. & A. H. Meets flKl anil f hfMl I n n . M . . . . r. m. nA.LLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. , mm tuts Lmru weanesdav of each month t7P M ' jlTODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. j-.j. i,jin,uiipn0. oa .neets Tuesday even- o - uc n.ui ciuii, at t :au p. K. pOLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets ; ' J evening Bl y :au O CIOCK, in K, of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. Clodoh, Sec'y.; - - : H. A. Bills N. G. URTEXDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P.-Meets . evomiig hi :au ociock. ln Schannos building, corner of Court and Second Streets. -Rnituiraln u . , , . , vlted. "-"w-L'5'1"" u" D. W.Vaubb, K. of R. and 8. " . C.C.' ; Wfj S?RisPAN iTEMPERENCE - - - - iis iwuj... aii are inTitea. rnEMPLH irmnv Kn a i n n nr JLJi k?.'S- Hal1' Corner Second and Court w a -m - ' Geobgb Gibons, W. 8 Mtbbs, Financier. - - M. W TAB. NESMITH POST, No. 32, G. A. Ri-Meete gjj-' J m i.ou r. M., Ill we K.. OI f B the i At nwrnooB in MESANG yEREIN-4-Meets every Snndav "R- J h S- SIS??. ??-A'-?iet! the - - , - Km uiat tmu inira tveanes day of each month, st 7 :3U r. m. 4 ' THE CHURCHES. OT. PETFR'a rnnnrn c., '. Pa -"Stri?!rt2rr:' "S? l"ery Sunday at j - " . ji. vespers at A D'EI H.?I5T! AN CHURCa-Preaching t. a rwmB every Bunoay at 11 a. m. and 7 p.m. 8ujiday school Immediatoly T & vTCitani, pastor. -..Miu.ouicuuciBior. Eservices School 9 :4a A. M. Evening Prayer on Friday at FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D: Tay . Pastor. Morning services every Sab bath at the academy at 11 a. x. Sabbath School Immediately after morning services. Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's resi dence. Union services in the court house at 7 CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C, Cuetis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 a. u. and 7 r. M. Sunday School after morning service, r Strangers cordially invited.; Seats fxee. M E. CHURCH Rev. A. C. Spkkceb, pastor. Services every Sunday morning. Sunday : v -wv. . a inuu mviiauon is extended by both pastor and people to all. - YOUR flTTEflTIOIl Is called to the fact that Dealer in Glass, lime, Plaster, Cement anid Building Material of all kinds. ' i :Crrte the Finest I.lae of - To be found in the City. 72 CJUashingtpts Street. ; t : W. H. BUTTS, Prop,. Z IfoijBO Second. Sre'-v Tire DalleaV jOrt ""Thia well ' tnnton at an A lunt tV.. well known W. H. Butts, long a resi dent of Wasco county, has an extraordi nary fine- Btock of -A Sheep Herder's Delight tad Irish Diiarbasca. In fact, all the leading brands of fine Wines, liquors and Cigars Give the old man a call and you will come again. 1 I - J-Jghtlioasfl Lsmpi and Xenses. ' . . In lighthouses there are six orders of lights, graded according to their inten sity, r The lamp of, the lowest or sixth order, which consumes only half a gill of coal oil an hour, gives about as much light . as an. ordinary parlor reading lamp (say 13 candle power), while the largest or first order- lamp,-which burns sixteen' gills an hour, gives' 450 candle power of light. But while the naked flame of the lamp gives tins much light, the French Fresnel lens in which the lamp is set -condenses and concentrates this light,, so. that it is multiplied in power many times. . - Thus the little . 13 candle power- flame of. the sixth order lamp has in a lens a power of 75 candles; and the great 450 candle power light of the first order lamp, when -placed in its enormous lens, gives .a. power of . some 12,000 candles. , Such a lens - is 13 feet high, and has . a - diameter of Ji f eet. Harper's Young People. . . . .. . "..-; .' A SfekuileM Steel .BosUn-'"---'" ' ' A seamless steel boat, which has been patented by an English engineer, has been launched from the -'-yard of the company ..that was formed 1 to -work the patent at. Wakefield, England.. , '..--.'; The boat is fifteen .feet long, 4 feet beam, weighs 333 pounds, and will carry six persona. It waa made from a single piece af steel, compressed 'into form by powerful hydraulic machinery. ; 1 The company has an extensive plant, containing a press weighing 165 tons, and giving a pressure equal to 800 pounds to the square inch. - . -. . . . It is intended to. -build the boata 'for service on large steamships and Vessels going to countries where the climate is hot and dry, as the nature of the con struction of - these' boats Tenders them more seaworthy than similar craft of wood, . as they, will neither shrink nor warp, They are- fitted - in the interior with wood, and -are therefore useful for pleasure boata. Philadelphia Record. STIPATION, AfflicU half the American people yet there is only one preparation of Sarsaparilla that acts on the bowels and reaches this important trouble, and that is Jot's Vearetahln flr.n.-:ii. t. Ileres It In 2-4 hours, and an occasional dose prerenis return. -Vererer.by permission to C. K Elilngton, 125 Locust Avenue, Ban Francisco; J. H. Brown. Petalmna: TT n wnn r- - - , MiJ VrtUll, Ban Francisco, and hundreds of others -who hare " consupauon. one letter is a sample of hundreds. - Elkinetnn. xrrt to- 'T 1 w . . - 1U1 years subject to bilious headaches and constipa tion. Hare been so ad for a year back have had to take a physic, every other night or else I woold have a headache. After taking one bottle f J. V. 8., I am in splendid shape. It has done iruuuariu uungs aor me. Feople simHarly ... M. . . . . nnunvu Huiuiu try u ana oe oonvmcea." . , Vegetable ; w Sarsaparilla " 1Io mxlru,- roast effective, largest bottle, me price, fi.00. .1 1 for ' For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY -V .-. . THE DALLES, OREGON., - , ASevere; Law. . The English peo ple look more closely -'to the Sennlneneu. of these staples than : we do. In fact; they have a law nnder ' ' which they- inaka eixsres and de stroy ;. adulterated , ' products j that are , not what they are represented to be. Under this statute thousands of pounds of tea have ' been burned because of their wholesale adul teration. . . ... To, by the way, is" one of the most notorl-. . onsly adulterated articles of commerce.- Not '. alone are the bright, shiny green teas artlfl. ' -cially colored,' but . thousands of pounds of ' substitutes for tea leaves are used to swell the bulk of cheap teas; ash, sloe, and willow .leaves being those- most commonly, used. Again, sweepings frcm tea warehouses are colored and-sold'as tea. " Even exhausted tea JeBvaa gathered from the tea-houses are kept, : ' aried, and madeorjersnd find ifaelr way into -the cheap teas. . , . . . . The English government attempts to stamp his out by coufictf-jn; but no tea is too . poor for us, and the result is. that probably the poorest teas used by any nation are those consumed in America. - "" Beech'a Tea is presented with the guar anty that It is uncolored and unadulterated; In fact, the sun-cureu tea leaf pare and sim ple. Its purity insures superior strength, bout one third less of it being required for ; aa infusion than of the artificial teas, and its fragrance and exquisite flavor is at once a'p- . parent. . It will be a revelation to you. - In order that Its-purity and quality may be guar- , anteed, it is sold only in .pound packages muring- mis traae-rna-t ft: Price eoo per-pound. Tor sale s : . . ot t ft, , V - x-,f iwijj:-v StillgiiiDeeE rf , 1 ,Aan 3LA i ' -tixtt.trx'iii-ii.Maiiit-.r. t v - V , i-ON MAIM . STBEET :: --. -t . Where he will be glad ioW any and al 7" t of his old patrons. Open day and Night. First das meals .; twenty -fire cents. . Inn uuy itletfould DURHA11 JOLES BROS.. ": v-: : it -irv i? -C; DEALERS IN :- Staple ana Fancy tones, Hay, Grain Masonic Block. Corner third and, Pipe Wo IR, Tin MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE. Shop on Third Street, , next door west of Young & Kuss' -' ;v .; ; ' .. v J Blacksmith Shop. flew o - THE DALLES, OREGON. Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-CIass Meals, 25 Cents, A First Class Hotel in Every Respect. - - - i :: . v .". None.lut the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. DEiiafliiBift it-ani Coimtv . T . v TICKET. For Supreme Jndge. .. i Alfred S. Bennett. -. For Attorney General, ,r George E. Chamberlain. For Member of Congreee, - - - 2d District, : ;- : James H. Slater. . ""' For Circuit jtidge, 3 ' - ' 7th District, r '-?', W. Ij. Bradshaw. , For Prosecuting 'Attorney, - " 7th District, ::t : J. P. Moored For Member State Board -Equalization, . . ,tn uiatrict, - . ; , . . William Hnghes. Joint Senator, lftb District, Sher ' : man and Wasco cbunties, V J. A. Smith; '- " .- - of Sherman.- -. Joint Senator, 18th District, Gilliam, Sherman and Wasco counties, Gk Rinehart,V ; - - " ; : --' :. of Gilliam. ; Joint Kepreeentatives, '-18th Eepre- For For For Kuuibivv Luawivoaermaa ana r - . . ' Wasco, counties,. . - H. E.vMoore, y S. F. Blythe. ; For County Judge,' " " r r GEORGE C. BLAKELEY. . For County Clerk,:"-i J "-' " ' JAMES-B-. CKOSSEN. ; For County Sheriff i":"';- r-'" -r THOMAS A. WARD. For Couhly Treasurer, " ' -WlLlSAM K. CORSON, v. ; . For Cbu'ntyieeeesot ' - UUKU 1. JrKATxIEJS. ; For County Sureybr,." ;r" ' IV.; t T ; J . K. GOK1X1JN . - For School Snperintendent, . - . : F.,P.FZGERAXD. . - For CoBttty CbmmissiOsier; . .7 : . JAMES DARKIF.IJ.K. For County Coroner. ? . . JOHN W.MOORE. 4-21td PUREST. MOST RELIABLE. I j old Kmej iQje Ojejqerry old soul, Had lived wtisareaCflaeo? ours. haVacaUedjorBULL DURHAM la snjone 17 1715 pipe, And been nxerrier.ijinder it's powers. ' Thousands of Smokers .: The Millionaire in bis palace, - -- The Laborer in his cottage, , The Swell on the street, , - The Sailor on his ship, .;;;;:'. Comfort-lovers everywhere, -- ' Prefer Bull Durham, Blackwell'a Durham Tobacco Co. J uvsiUB, n. w. and Ffced. ourt Streets. The Dalles.Oregon. aijil Uooring Nicholas, Prop, p""' , District and County TICKET. For Supreme Judge, - P. A. Moore. ..... . For Attorney General,: .- Lionel R. Webster. For Member of Congress, 2d District, W. R; Ellis, For Circuit Judge, 7th District, . Greorge Watkins. '. For Prosecuting Attorney, 7th District, W. H. Wilson. - For Member State Board Equalization in uistnct, . J John X: Luckey. For Joint Senator, I7th District, coDsist- . ing oi enerman ana Wasco Counties, H. S. McDaniels. For Joint Senator, 18th Dfstriotl consist " -ing of Gilliam, Sherman and .. . .1 Wasco Counties, . . W; W.;Stei-wer. - For Joint Representatives, 18th Repre sentative District consisting of Sherman and Wasco Counties, E.;N Chandler, r T: R. Coon- j - . For County,, Judge,-.'. c. n. thornbury; . For County Clerk, - : : ; J. M. HUNTINGTON.; For County herifri"-"'' C. P. BALCH. ; - For County '' Commissioner." '..- - H. A. LEAVENS.. . . -" "For Ctouhty Trearorei',- r - .. WM.. MICHELL. -:- , r ' .. . . r. - - '-r--. - . ' " ' ForCounty : Assessor. ' ; ' . . .- - f JOEL W. KOONTZ. : For County School Superintendents . , TROY SHELLEY, v C ' : . For County SurvayoryJ; ' v - ' i -'.'- E F- SHARP.. ? . . -' ! . - .'For County Coroner -N. M. EASTWOOD. - - 4-ietf -. ::':; QEPUBLIGSII